[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index]

DAM-L LS: Thaksin may speed up privatization of EGAT (fwd)



----- Forwarded message from owner-irn-mekong@netvista.net -----

X-UIDL: ?&H"!Rfi!!H&0"!F<1"!
Return-path: <owner-irn-mekong@netvista.net>
Received: from DaVinci.NetVista.net (mjdomo@mail.netvista.net [206.170.46.10])
	by lox.sandelman.ottawa.on.ca (8.8.7/8.8.8) with ESMTP id QAA16966
	for <dianne@sandelman.ottawa.on.ca>; Sun, 25 Feb 2001 16:53:15 -0500 (EST)
From: owner-irn-mekong@netvista.net
Received: [(from mjdomo@localhost)
	by DaVinci.NetVista.net (8.10.0/8.8.8) id f1PLiJH28314
	for irn-mekong-list; Sun, 25 Feb 2001 13:44:19 -0800 (PST)
	(envelope-from owner-irn-mekong@netvista.net)]
Date: Sun, 25 Feb 2001 13:44:19 -0800 (PST)
Message-ID: <200102252144.f1PLiJH28314@DaVinci.NetVista.net>
Subject: LS: Thaksin may speed up privatization of EGAT
Sender: owner-irn-mekong@netvista.net
Precedence: bulk

DJ ASIAN POWER: Thai Election Promises Add Hurdle To Reform
Copyright © 2001 Dow Jones & Company, Inc.

SINGAPORE (Dow Jones)--Thaksin Shinawatra's new Thai-Rak-Thai government 
shows every sign of attempting to speed up Thailand's privatization 
process, including the sale of thermal generating assets of the Electricity 
Generation Authority of Thailand, or EGAT.

But there appears to be indecision over whether to stick to populist 
election promises to restrict any sale to the Thai public. Add to this an 
overcommitment to forward electricity purchases, fierce opposition to 
privatization from labor unions, and a worsening public image, and EGAT's 
reform and privatization process looks fraught with pitfalls.

Union action against privatization last year helped with the election of 
Thaksin by playing on nationalist sympathies.

But concern that a domestic public sale would mean a lower price for EGAT's 
assets could be leading to a compromise on the election promise to sell 
only to Thais, according to a Bangkok-based analyst.

Some state enterprise union leaders, notably Pornchai Meemark of the 
telecoms union, have already accused the new government of preparing to 
offer stakes in some assets to business partners, including overseas 
companies.

A detailed proposal for the sale of EGAT is still awaited from the new 
government, but Chanaporn Kridakorn, EGAT's deputy governor of Policy and 
Planning, said at a recent industry conference in Singapore, "it will take 
at least two years to make the necessary preparation and deal with any 
employee problem."

Ratchaburi IPO: A Success, But Was It Underpriced?

EGAT has already successfully sold a 40% stake in its flagship asset - the 
3,700-megawatt Ratchaburi power plant - through an IPO restricted to the 
Thai public for US$500 million. Another 15% went to EGAT employees.

But the Ratchaburi sale was intensively managed, and EGAT sweetened the 
terms by removing most risk by guaranteeing to buy power for 25 years, 
while taking on the plant's fuel price risk.

What's more, the IPO valuation of just under US$400,000 for each megawatt 
of capacity was low compared with other regional sales. For example, 
Malaysia's Kapar generating company was sold at US$680,000/MW, according to 
analysts AIDResearch.

AIDResearch expects that Singapore's sale of generation assets in the 
second half of 2001 will attract bids of around the 
US$500,000-US$600,000/MW range.

EGAT plans to sell off its remaining thermal generating assets "over a 
number of years," but will hold on to its hydro facilities and transmission 
network, according to Chanaporn. It has also sold its shares in Electricity 
Generating PLC, or EGCO (H.EGA).
Thailand is scheduled to introduce a power pool in 2003, although this is 
expected to be delayed until 2005, according to the Bangkok-based analyst. 
The pool will allow privatized generators and Independent Power Producers, 
or IPPs, to sell directly to end-users.

IPPs Face Offtake Delays

Lower-than-expected electricity demand means EGAT is keen to delay the 
signing of fresh power purchase agreements with IPPs and neighboring 
countries.

Local Thai press quoted Siridath Klankwamdee, EGAT's deputy governor, as 
saying contracts that were expected to be signed in 2003-2004 will now be 
postponed until 2007, unless there is a rapid acceleration in electricity 
demand growth.

Peak demand is now rising steadily - up 8.8% in 2000, to 15,000 MW - 
following a slump after the region's financial crisis in 1997. But planners 
had already lined up forward supply based on rapid growth predictions of 
the mid-nineties, leaving EGAT overcommitted.
EGAT has bilateral deals with Laos for 3,000 MW; with Myanmar for up to 
1,500 MW by 2010, as well as with Malaysia and China. When existing deals 
with IPPs, and expansion of its own capacity are added, Thailand faces 
surplus capacity of well over 40% over the next few years - far more than 
it needs to guarantee supply security.

IPPs likely to be affected include Union Power Development Co. Ltd. - a 
consortium including Finland's Fortum OYJ (Y.FTM) and U.S. Consolidated 
Electric Power Asia - Bo Win Power Co. Ltd., Eastern Power Co. Ltd., BLCP 
Power Co. Ltd. and Gulf Power Generation Co. Ltd. - whose main shareholder 
is Edison Mission Energy.

Union Power and Gulf Power have requested delays anyway, as environmental 
protests have delayed construction of their plants.
Thailand's first IPP - Tri-Energy, a joint-venture comprising U.S. Unocal 
Corp. (UCL), Sweden's Vattenfall Group (S.VTF) and Thailand's Banpu PLC 
(H.BPU) - began sales to EGAT last July. EGAT's other commitments include 
contracts with Independent Power, a subsidiary of Thai Oil Co. Ltd. (H.TOL).

EGAT has not yet decided how to deal with existing power purchase 
agreements once it is privatized.

Small is Popular

A notable success in Thailand has been the Small Power Producer, or SPP, 
program. In 1998, this sector represented just over 3% of generating 
capacity. By 2003, the share is expected to rise to 7.3%, while EGAT's 
share is expected to fall from 84% to 61% over the same period.

The most recent project to be completed is a 110 MW plant run by 
International Power PLC (IPR) - recently demerged from the U.K.'s National 
Power - which opened last October.

SPPs are an approach that appears to be growing increasingly popular among 
international agencies and banks, both in terms of efficiency and as a more 
sustainable and less disruptive means of electrification in developing 
countries.

-By Jeremy Bowden, Dow Jones Newswires; 65-421-4814; 
mailto:jeremy.bowden@dowjones.com-0- 21/02/01 03-52G 


-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
To unsubscribe from this list, send a message to majordomo@netvista.net
with no subject and the following text in the body of the message
"unsubscribe irn-mekong".

----- End of forwarded message from owner-irn-mekong@netvista.net -----